Standardsignatur
Titel
Climate and air pollution impacts on habitat suitability of Austrian forest ecosystems
Verfasser
Thomas Dirnböck
Ika Djukic
Barbara Kitzler
Johannes Kobler
Janet P. Mol-Dijkstra
Maximilian Posch
Franz Starlinger
Erscheinungsort
Cambridge
Verlag
Public Library of Science (PLoS); PubMed Central
Erscheinungsjahr
2017
Seiten
16 S.
Seiten
e0184194
Material
Bandaufführung
Digitales Dokument
Datensatznummer
203656
Quelle
PLoS ONE : Open Access ; Jrg. 12 ; 9 (2017) , e0184194, 16 S.
Abstract
Climate change and excess deposition of airborne nitrogen (N) are among the main stressors to floristic biodiversity. One particular concern is the deterioration of valuable habitats such as those protected under the European Habitat Directive. In future, climate-driven shifts (and losses) in the species potential distribution, but also N driven nutrient enrichment may threaten these habitats. We applied a dynamic geochemical soil model (VSD+) together with a novel niche-based plant response model (PROPS) to 5 forest habitat types (18 forest sites) protected under the EU Directive in Austria. We assessed how future climate change and N deposition might affect habitat suitability, defined as the capacity of a site to host its typical plant species. Our evaluation indicates that climate change will be the main driver of a decrease in habitat suitability in the future in Austria. The expected climate change will increase the occurrence of thermophilic plant species while decreasing cold-tolerant species. In addition to these direct impacts, climate change scenarios caused an increase of the occurrence probability of oligotrophic species due to a higher N immobilisation in woody biomass leading to soil N depletion. As a consequence, climate change did offset eutrophication from N deposition, even when no further reduction in N emissions was assumed. Our results show that climate change may have positive side-effects in forest habitats when multiple drivers of change are considered.